That figure doesn't account for the partial day of docking
on Wednesday, when the Triumph was towed into the terminal after being set
adrift in the Mobile River after strong winds blew the 894-foot vessel free
from its moorings at BAE Systems Inc.

The charge is based on a $10.81 rate-per-foot charge the
port authority charges for vessels. The daily rate is based on a 24-hour
docking.

The Carnival Triumph's rate is based on vessels that are no
larger than 899.9 feet; at 900-feet, the port authority charges $12.92 per day
or $81,396 during a one-week period.

"These charges will go to Carnival," Sheila Gurganus,
general manager of the cruise terminal, said today. "They know it and have
agreed on it."

Also not figured into the charges are security costs that
Gurganus said have not been determined.

"It's a normal fee that I've charged them in the past," she
said. "We are required to ... maintain security as required by the Department of
Homeland Security and the Coast Guard, which we have been doing since it
arrived last week."

There is no time table for how long the Triumph will remain
docked at the cruise terminal, where repairs to the interior of the ship have
continued. A spokesman with BAE Systems Inc., where the vessel had been docked and
undergoing repairs from Feb. 15 to April 3, had no update on when a return is
expected.

Vance Gulliksen, spokesman with Carnival Cruise Lines, also
could not provide a timetable, but confirmed that work is still continuing
while the ship is docked.

Gurganus said the work is not taking place to the vessel's
exterior, and that the cruise terminal is not intended to operate as a repair
shipyard.

She said her office has all the "necessary liability
insurance and paperwork" allowing for the repair work to continue.

"We've given permission for a 400-ton crane onto the dock,"
Gurganus said. "Everything has gone smoothly out there. I have a dock that can
sustain a lot of things there. The crews like it here; they can come and go."

The Triumph also might offer a unique backdrop for proms taking
place at the cruise terminal this weekend. B.C. Rains and Alma Bryant high
schools both have their proms scheduled.

Heavy winds up to 66 mph recorded in some locations in
Mobile on April 3, knocked the Carnival Triumph from its moorings during a
tragic incident in which 64-year-old John R. "Buster" Johnson was thrown into
the Mobile River after the vessel smashed into a pier he was on. A 35-year-old co-worker
was also tossed into the river, but he was rescued by authorities and treated
for a mild case of hypothermia.